Assessment of Common Housekeeping Genes As Reference for Gene Expression Studies Using RT‑Qpcr in Mouse Choroid Plexus Kim Hoa Ho1,2 & Annarita Patrizi1*

Assessment of Common Housekeeping Genes As Reference for Gene Expression Studies Using RT‑Qpcr in Mouse Choroid Plexus Kim Hoa Ho1,2 & Annarita Patrizi1*

www.nature.com/scientificreports OPEN Assessment of common housekeeping genes as reference for gene expression studies using RT‑qPCR in mouse choroid plexus Kim Hoa Ho1,2 & Annarita Patrizi1* Choroid plexus (ChP), a vascularized secretory epithelium located in all brain ventricles, plays critical roles in development, homeostasis and brain repair. Reverse transcription quantitative real‑time PCR (RT‑qPCR) is a popular and useful technique for measuring gene expression changes and also widely used in ChP studies. However, the reliability of RT‑qPCR data is strongly dependent on the choice of reference genes, which are supposed to be stable across all samples. In this study, we validated the expression of 12 well established housekeeping genes in ChP in 2 independent experimental paradigms by using popular stability testing algorithms: BestKeeper, DeltaCq, geNorm and NormFinder. Rer1 and Rpl13a were identifed as the most stable genes throughout mouse ChP development, while Hprt1 and Rpl27 were the most stable genes across conditions in a mouse sensory deprivation experiment. In addition, Rpl13a, Rpl27 and Tbp were mutually among the top fve most stable genes in both experiments. Normalisation of Ttr and Otx2 expression levels using diferent housekeeping gene combinations demonstrated the profound efect of reference gene choice on target gene expression. Our study emphasized the importance of validating and selecting stable housekeeping genes under specifc experimental conditions. Choroid plexus (ChP) is a highly vascularized tissue located within the four brain ventricles. It is comprised of multiple cell types, including: epithelial, endothelial, mesenchymal and immune cells, with epithelial cells constituting the majority1. Te epithelial layer encases connective stroma and a highly permeable fenestrated capillary network2,3, producing 70%–80% of the cerebrospinal fuid (CSF)4,5 and forming the blood-cerebrospinal fuid barrier (BCSFB)4,5. ChP is an understudied area in neuroscience but it is attracting more attention as its developmental function is gradually elucidated and its role in neuropathology is increasingly noticed 6. Histori- cally, ChP-CSF were only known to function as “cushion” (physical protection through buoyancy) and “sink” (removal of brain metabolites through CSF drainage) of the brain 4. Recently, it has been demonstrated that CSF composition and ChP-derived factors, such as signalling and trophic molecules, play indispensable functions for brain development, brain homeostasis and adult neural stem cell niches. For example, it has been demonstrated that ChP has the intrinsic ability to sense external changes associated with CNS activity 7,8 and it is also well known that ChP produces and releases Otx2, an essential factor implicated in both the onset and the closure of visual critical period9. In addition, ChP also controls the transportation of many blood-derived factors (nutrients, proteins, hormones, inorganic compounds, etc.) into the brain and it is emerging as the neuroimmune gateway regulating central nervous system (CNS) immune-surveillance6. Interestingly, changes in ChP-CSF structure and function have been linked to neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer’s disease 10, to neurodevelopmental disorders11 such as autism-spectrum disorder12 and schizophrenia13 and also to neuroimmune disease such as multiple sclerosis14. Tis increasing interest in ChP parallels the need for gene expression studies of ChP in dif- ferent experimental contexts. Despite the advances in high-throughput transcriptomic technologies like microarray and RNA sequencing 15, reverse transcription quantitative real-time PCR (RT-qPCR) remains a popular method for measuring mRNA expression level, especially when the number of target genes is moderate. RT-qPCR is conceptually and techni- cally simple, economical and fast yet still highly sensitive, accurate and reproducible 16. Considered as the “gold standard” for gene expression analysis, RT-qPCR is utilised to validate microarray and RNA sequencing results 17. 1Schaller Research Group, German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), DKFZ-ZMBH Alliance, Heidelberg, Germany. 2Faculty of Biosciences, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany. *email: [email protected] Scientifc Reports | (2021) 11:3278 | https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-82800-5 1 Vol.:(0123456789) www.nature.com/scientificreports/ Gene Gene name (MGI) Primer sequence (5′–3′) Amplicon size (bp) Tm %GC References TGA CGT TGA CAT CCG TAA AG 56.83 45 Actb Actin, beta 143 65,66 GAG GAG CAA TGA TCT TGA TCT 56.17 42.86 GTC CAG GGG TAT TAC AGG CAA 59.44 52.38 Atp5f1/Atp5pb ATP synthase peripheral stalk-membrane subunit b 112 62,67 TCA GGA ATC AGC CCA AGA CG 59.75 55 TTC TGG TGC TTG TCT CAC TGA 59.24 47.62 B2m Beta-2 microglobulin 104 68 CAG TAT GTT CGG CTT CCC ATTC 59.39 50 TGA CCT CAA CTA CAT GGT CTACA 58.59 43.48 Gapdh Glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase 85 69–71 CTT CCC ATT CTC GGC CTT G 58.21 57.89 CAA ACT TTG CTT TCC CTG GT 56.72 45 Hprt1/Hprt Hypoxanthine guanine phosphoribosyl transferase 101 72–74 TCT GGC CTG TAT CCA ACA CTTC 60.03 50 TGG TGG GTG TGA ATC TGC C 59.93 57.89 PrimerBank75 Pgk1 Phosphoglycerate kinase 1 124 ACT TTA GCG CCT CCC AAG ATA 58.88 47.62 ID 70778975c3 GCC TTG GGA ATT TAC CAC CT 57.77 50 Rer1 Retention in endoplasmic reticulum sorting receptor 1 137 63,72,76 CTT CGA ATG AAG GGA CGA AA 55.79 45 AGC CTA CCA GAA AGT TTG CTTAC 58.93 43.48 Rpl13a Ribosomal protein L13A 129 77,78 GCT TCT TCT TCC GAT AGT GCATC 59.51 47.83 AAG CCG TCA TCG TGA AGA ACA 60.27 47.62 Rpl27 Ribosomal protein L27 143 72,76,79 CTT GAT CTT GGA TCG CTT GGC 59.67 52.28 Succinate dehydrogenase complex, subunit A, favoprotein AGA AAG GCC AAA TGC AGC TC 59.11 50 Sdha 131 41 (Fp) GTG AGA ACA AGA AGG CAT CAGC 59.84 50 CCT TGT ACC CTT CAC CAA TGAC 58.92 50 Tbp TATA box binding protein 119 80,81 ACA GCC AAG ATT CAC GGT AGA 59.1 47.62 GCC CAG TGT TAC CAC CAA GA 59.89 55 Ubc Ubiquitin C 104 82,83 CCC ATC ACA CCC AAG AAC A 57.26 52.63 CAC CAA ATC GTA CTG GAA GACA 58.34 45.45 Ttr Transthyretin 76 84,85 GTC GTT GGC TGT GAA AAC CAC 60.53 52.38 TAT CTA AAG CAA CCG CCT TACG 58.55 45.45 Otx2 Orthodenticle homeobox 2 62 86–88 AAG TCC ATA CCC GAA GTG GTC 59.45 52.38 Table 1. Summarized information of 12 candidate reference genes and 2 target genes. Tm: melting temperature (calculated by NCBI Primer-Blast with default settings for Primer Parameters). Two major RT-qPCR quantifcation methods have been developed and are widely used: absolute and relative/ comparative quantifcation. Absolute quantifcation allows the inference of transcript number from a standard/ calibration curve, which is constructed as RT-qPCR fuorescence signals corresponding to serial dilutions of a known sample (cloned or synthetic cDNA). Tis method, therefore, relies on the externally-built curve and fails to consider inter- and intra-sample variabilities. Relative quantifcation addresses this limitation by measuring target gene expression relative to the expression of a reference gene within that sample. Te ideal reference genes used in a RT-qPCR experiment are required to have constant expression levels regardless of biological difer- ences and experimental conditions 18. Housekeeping genes, constitutive genes required for the maintenance of basic cellular function, are therefore, ofen used for this purpose. However, such ideal reference genes have yet to be discovered 19, which has led to a rise in literature evaluating the stability of reference genes specifc for each species, tissue, cell type and condition of interest20–24. To our knowledge, reference gene stability has not yet been assessed in ChP, potentially undermining RT- qPCR experiments on this tissue. Here, we selected and examined the stability of 12 well-established housekeep- ing genes: Actb, Atp5f1 (also known as Atp5pb), B2m, Gapdh, Hprt1 (also known as Hprt), Pgk1, Rer1, Rpl13a, Rpl27, Sdha, Tbp, Ubc in ChP of Mus musculus (house mouse). Using not only descriptive statistics but also a combination of 4 most popular stability assessment algorithms for reference genes: BestKeeper25, DeltaCq26, geNorm18 and NormFinder27, we tested the 12 reference genes in 2 experimental panels: Developmental and Light/Dark rearing panels and identifed selective combinations of stable reference genes. Finally, we validated their efect as a normalisation factor to the expression of selective ChP markers, such as Transthyretin (Ttr)28 and Orthodenticle homeobox 2 (Otx2)29. Results Candidate reference genes, qPCR amplifcation experiment and descriptive statistics. Te 12 candidate reference genes used in this study were selected based on their distinct cellular function and on their extensive use in neuroscience researches18,22,23,30,31. In particular, we selected genes belonging to diferent func- tional classes to reduce the possibility that their response to the same experimental condition is co-regulated. We examined genes involved in the cellular cytoskeleton (Actb), in transcription or translation (Tbp, Rpl13a, Rpl27), in cellular metabolism (Gapdh, Sdha, Hprt1, Pgk1, Atp5f1), and in protein degradation (Ubc) in addition to ubiquitous and common cellular components, such as the major histocompatibility complex class I component (B2m) and a structural membrane protein of the Golgi apparatus (Rer1). Detailed information for each primer pair is presented in Table 1. To ensure there was no undesired product during amplifcation, we frst examined primer specifcity in silico using NCBI PrimerBlast32 and later confrmed

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